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BANTech Researchers-Department of Physics-University of Idaho
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Moscow

Physics
physics@uidaho.edu
phone: (208) 885-6380
Engineering Physics Rm 311
875 Perimeter Drive Stop 0903
Moscow, ID 83844-0903

BANTech Researchers

Dr. Eric Aston, Associate Professor of Chemical Engineering
Eric Aston, Ph.D.
Associate Professor
BEL 301 | 208-885-6953
After joining the Chemical Engineering faculty at the University of Idaho in the summer of 2001, Dr. Eric Aston branched out into various areas of colloids, thin films, polymeric and magnetic materials, nanotechnology and nanomechanics using atomic force microscopy (AFM), Langmuir-Blodgett deposition, and other complimentary techniques.
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Gregory Bohach, Ph.D.
Professor & Director/Associate Dean Idaho Ag Experiment Station
Research Interests: Pathogenesis of Infectious diseases and two general virulence mechanisms used by bacteria to cause disease in humans and animals
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Materials Science professor Daniel Choi
Daniel Choi, Ph.D.
Professor
MCCL 303C | 885-0352
Research Interests: Nano and Microtechnolgy-related applications in Bio, Electronics, Energies, Fluidics, Environment and Photonics.
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Rodney Hill
Rod Hill, Ph.D.
Associate Professor

(208) 885-2088 | rodhill@uidaho.edu
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Hrdlicka-Promo Photo
Patrick J. Hrdlicka, Ph.D.
Associate Professor
Renfrew 313W | 208-885-0108
Research: DNA biotechnology, nucleic acid based therapeutics/diagnostics, biological applications of nanomaterials, synthetic bioorganic chemistry including carbohydrates, nucleosides and oligonucleotides.
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James Nagler
James J. Nagler, Ph.D.
Interim Chair and Professor of Biological Sciences
Associate Director of WSU/UI Center for Reproductive Biology
The Nagler laboratory studies the effect of environmental factors, such as contaminants, photoperiod and diet on the reproductive biology of salmonid fishes.
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Dr. Deborah Stenkamp
Deborah Stenkamp, Ph.D.
Professor
Stenkamp’s research interests center on the examination of cellular and molecular mechanisms of vertebrate retinal development and regeneration, with a specific focus on photoreceptor differentiation, using zebrafish as the primary experimental model.
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